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How to Turn Your Book into a Trailer

March 13th, 2009 5 comments

John B. Rosenman

***Please view the book trailer on my web site at www.johnrosenman.com. Just scroll down beneath the top blog or visit “Trailers And Movie Clips” on the menu to the left.***

Recently I decided to turn my novel, Dax Rigby, War Correspondent into a trailer. After all, many authors I knew online were doing it, and supposedly trailers helped with promotion. So I thought I’d try it, too. Though I’m only a beginner on the subject, I hope the following account is helpful to authors who might consider converting their books—especially novels—into short, dramatic movies of two minutes or less.

A fellow writer gave me the name of a good, moderate-budget designer of book trailers. I contacted her, and filled out two forms. The first was an e-contract and I chose the deluxe, $300 package (some trailers cost much more) which included stills and video segments, music and a voiceover. The contract also specified that I could have up to three revisions with my input. (Eventually I would use more.)

The other form requested a blurb, synopsis, pic of my book cover, all of which I sent, and it asked questions about the “turning points” and “black point” in the novel, the resolution, major conflict, setting, exciting scenes, pictures and types of music to be used. It also stipulated that a script would be provided with suggested pictures.

I e-signed the thing, sent it back, and used PayPal to send her half the payment.

As promised she sent me a script with accompanying pictures. I was surprised by how short and “bare bones” the script was, only about eighty words. Also, it omitted a lot of the plot. But as Kim McDougall, another designer of trailers points out, she hasn’t liked “trailers that tried to tell a story. That, after all, is the purpose of the book. Instead,” she prefers “trailers that offer up a mood, a feeling for the style of the book and only basic plot teasers.” Geoff Nelder, an author, describes it similarly. To him a trailer “is an extension of the imaginative artistic creation. The trailer is not a two-minute synopsis but an insight into the pull of the story. A writer has to hook the reader early in their novel, but the trailer is a multimedia hook taking the art into another dimension.”

At any rate, I looked at the provided script and requested some word changes and one or two new lines. The stock pictures she sent me were a more difficult matter. They didn’t look enough like the people and events in the novel. The hero and heroine were especially difficult. Fortunately, the designer was patient. Over a period of weeks, she sent me more stock photos. Eventually, I made my choices—not perfect, but acceptable.

The designer then sent me an url with recorded music. I went to the site, listened to the two clips she mentioned, and chose the one she recommended. It’s rousing and dramatic, in my opinion just right for Dax Rigby, which is an action-adventure SF novel.

The real problem came with the voiceover. Though I’m new to this game, it seemed too laid back and passive for my novel, which features warring aliens, fights to the death, and hot, passionate sex, not to mention a hero who tries to save two alien species and five billion lives back on Earth. To me, the voice needed to be as rousing as the music, and stir you in your seat.

I informed the Trailer Maker of my sentiments, and we hit a hiatus that lasted about a week. Perhaps, she said, she needed a new sound card. Eventually we decided to nix the voiceover and she cut $50 off the cost.

Next, came more fine-tuning of the video. A few words in the script were changed, and a couple of misspellings corrected. I asked that the publisher’s url be slowed down at the end so that potential purchasers would know where to go.

Finally, after six or seven weeks, we were ready for Show Time! I had proved a demanding, difficult-to-please customer but was pleased with the result (and since then the trailer has received much praise.) I sent her the second payment, and as contracted, she put the trailer on several sites, including YouTube and Blazing Trailers. I, in turn, installed it on my web site, MySpace, Photobucket, Break.com, etc.

Fellow Beginners, be advised. There are many formats out there, and some sites are fussy. In my case, they don’t accommodate Flash Video. Thus, you can’t upload it without converting it. In the modern, rapidly-changing world of the Internet, one size does NOT fit all.

Finally, do trailers, which Kim McDougall calls “the newest fad in book promotion,” actually work? Like her, I don’t know. She points out that “The book trailer phenomenon is still relatively new.” Plus, there are lots of books competing for fewer customer bucks during a deteriorating economy. Since some sites my trailer’s posted on lack counters, I can only guess that in the two weeks it’s been posted, 500 people have watched it. That’s not many, considering that trailers about celebrities’ antics and misbehaving animals regularly attract hundreds of thousands of hits. However, I’m finding new ways to “sell” the video, starting with PROMOS in seven or eight Yahoo Writer and Reader groups. In addition, one trailer site has given it featured billing, and I used Photobucket to send a link to fifty folks that not only connected them to the trailer, but to seven of my books. So far, several friends have responded favorably.

There are, of course, various ways to gauge the effectiveness of trailers, such as your Amazon stats and the number of visitors to your web site. But guys and gals, nothing’s perfect.

At the time I contracted for my first trailer, my assessment was that I would probably not break even, let alone turn a profit. Still, it seemed a good thing to get my name and book viewed by as many people as possible. Also, I felt that if I used a variety of other promotional methods, there would overall, be a positive effect.

One can always hope.

As for the future, I’ve already arranged for my next trailer, which will be done at Norfolk State University with two talented students under the guidance of a Mass Communications professor. This time I wrote the tentative script myself, reducing 116,000 words of A Senseless Act of Beauty to 110. One of the students will be using Photoshop, which I understand will animate the trailer’s scenes. Perhaps we’ll use voiceover.

Finally, since I am a newcomer in this area, I invite comments and corrections. There may be many of the latter, but they should benefit us all. Until my next blog, then . . . See you at the movies!

Romance Rules!

September 13th, 2008 2 comments

John B. Rosenman

Many of the readers of this site already know the following fact.  Still, it bears repeating: in the world of fiction, Romance Rules!

As Leigh Michaels states in “Studying the Romance Novel,” “Romance novels are the best-selling segment of the paperback fiction market in North America.”  They “account for well over 50 percent of mass-market paperback fiction sold in the United States.”  In addition, “more than a third of all fiction sold in the United States (including mass-market paper, trade paper, and hardcover books) is romantic fiction.  Paperback romances outsell mysteries, literary novels, science fiction novels, and Westerns.  More than two thousand romance titles are published each year, creating a $1.2 billion business in 2004.”

Now the focus of this blog is not on why romance novels are so popular, whether or not they’re good or bad, or even on why many people, including literary critics, look down on them as an inferior genre.  Those are all interesting subjects, but my main point here is that it would benefit many of us to take into consideration the great popularity of romance fiction when we write and market our own novels. 

This is especially true because the modern romance novel has branched off into many different directions and covers terrain which non-Romance writers may regard as belonging to them.  Michaels states that in a romance novel, “the core story is the developing relationship between a man and a woman.”  Perhaps so, but she also acknowledges “that there are exceptions,” such as “gay romances.” 

These days, there are many varieties of romance fiction, a fact that we all should remember.  To take just one example, in the growing world of electronic publishers, Blade Publishing publishes over a dozen different types of romance.  They are Contemporary, Erotica, Fantasy, Gay-Lesbian, Historical, Inspirational, Interracial, Menage, Paranormal, Romantic Comedy, Sci-Fiction, Suspense, and Western.   

What does this mean – that we should all put attractive couples in our novels and throw in some feverish bump and tickle?  I’m suggesting we should at least consider it in moderation, if it doesn’t violate the integrity and intent of our storylines.  After all, romance and sex sell.  Their appeal is universal, timeless, and fascinating, and they are not about to go away.  According to Michaels, “22 percent of all romance readers are male,” for God’s sake.  We may snort at the genre, but love and sex are still what makes the world go around.  Together, they largely account for the perpetuation of the species. 

This also means that when we market our “non” Romance novels, we should not automatically exclude romance readers, writers, and reviewers, or avoid their society.  There is in fact a sea of such folk.  In two of the Yahoo groups I belong to, romance enthusiasts predominate.  Whatever our differences, I feel it’s useful to pitch my stuff with excerpts and sales lines and to emphasize what we have in common, which is an interest in torrid human relationships. 

One last area here involves two of my own novel covers.  The examples may be somewhat skewed, because these are online e-book and POD (Print on Demand) publishers.  In general, they appear to emphasize sex and romance more on their covers than do traditional print publishers.  Still, I think these two cases are instructive. 

The first cover is for Beyond Those Distant Stars.  Published earlier by NovelBooks, Inc., it will be reissued by Mundania Press with a new cover.  In the novel, there is a romance between a heroine and a sexy stud.  However, the romance is different from that in romances because while it is important, it is not the main focus or the core story.  The heroine herself is in her late thirties and only mildly attractive.  Also, because of a radioactive accident, she has been converted into a superhuman cyborg who doubts her attractiveness and sexuality.  With good reason: nearly two-thirds of her body is artificial. 

What did the Mundania artist do?  If you’re interested, click on the link below.  On the cover, the hero’s all right, but they turned Stella into a Barbie Doll.  In the first version, she was so stacked and well endowed up-top, she would have tipped right over and fallen flat on her face.  I had the artist downsize her, so she could at least walk.

 http://johnrosenman.com/?page_id=9

Now that you’ve clicked on the cover, is it any good?  Perhaps a more important question is, will it sell?  Sex and sexy people don’t automatically translate into big sales, but romance often does help, which to me is an important consideration. 

The second example involves Dax Rigby, War Correspondent, another action-packed science-fiction novel.  As in Beyond Those Distant Stars, there is an important, but not central love story.  If you click on the link below, you may agree that the artist did a striking job on the cover.  Lyrical Press, though, does have a romantic/erotic slant, and I can’t overlook the hero’s sculpted abs and manly chest.  If the cover were longer, perhaps we’d see a half-naked babe clinging to Dax’s right leg.

 http://johnrosenman.com/?page_id=64

SO, if you can’t lick ’em, join ’em.  Consider using romance elements in your novels and on your covers to enlarge their appeal and to sell and promote them.  After all, romance readers outnumber all other groups and like to buy books too.